Dressed in distinctive Sikh garb, Snatam Kaur embodies the Sikh message of strength through inner serenity. Her music can be heard around the world in venues from yoga studios to schools to Hollywood films to the homes of seekers worldwide. Traveling across the U.S, Europe, Asia, South America and the South Pacific, Snatam Kaur performs at over 60 venues each year, from the Bahamas to Russia. One fan spoke for all when he admitted, “We come to Snatam’s concerts to experience the beautiful atmosphere her voice creates, to heal and grow.”

Snatam Kaur has an amazing ability to transform traditional chants into a contemporary sound that appeals to the modern ear and awakens an ancient yearning in the soul. Sacred Sounds Radio calls her music “spiritually uplifting and deeply soul cleansing.” Ram Dass, celebrated author of Be Here Now, says that “in Snatam’s voice...there is purity, clarity, and love.”

Sopurkh was given his Sikh spiritual name by Yogi Bhajan, his Spiritual Teacher since 2000. Yogi Bhajan said this about his name, “Sopurkh means your presence and your fragrance will work and you will be ever a source of happiness. That kind of personality, you can be.”

What warms his heart the most? Rising before the sun, meditating, practicing yoga, and chanting sacred mantras, and then seeing his 3 year old daughter Jap Preet Kaur’s early morning smile.

His interests, besides yoga, include gardening, playing tabla and music with his wife, and bike riding. Back in the 80’s, he was one of the top freestyle bikers in the country, before the X Games.

He studied and trained with Gurmukh & Gurushabd at Golden Bridge in Los Angeles, a premier Kundalini Yoga Center. Sopurkh offers classes that are challenging, provocative and encouraging. Sopurkh facilitates students to move beyond old fears, into a blissful, present, reality.

With his family, Sopurkh travels the world, managing and promoting his wife’s music, the world renowned chant artist, Snatam Kaur. Together they teach yoga, meditation, and sacred mantras, illuminating the One light within all.

Prabhu Nam Kaur has a profound mastery of the sound current and is the mother of one of the most successful sacred music artists to date, Snatam Kaur. She is able to evoke a deeply sacred space with her devotional music. She has been studying the language Gurmukhi for more than 30 years and takes great joy in her ongoing studies of the Siri Guru Granth Sahib, the holy text of the Sikhs. She is one of the leading Ragis (musicians) in the Sikh community of the West, and is a well-known teacher of the Gurmukhi language and its musical form, Gurbani.

Prabhu Nam Kaur has been singing sacred mantra and shabad from the Kundalini Yoga and Sikh traditions for more than 35 years. She aspires to sing these songs of God with devotion, so that their wisdom and beauty can shine forth, and so that listeners can find their own ability to sing and experience them as well.

Virtually all of us have been wounded, whether it was once or twice, occasionally, or regularly. For most of us, these wounds impact our lives in profound and subtle ways. We want to live our lives as radiant examples of how to live on the planet. We want to become aware of, and develop an ongoing connection with our higher selves. But we find that we are blocked by fears of lack of self worth. Sometimes we try to prove we are worthy, but nothing ever seems to be enough.

Sat Santokh is a leader in the field of transformational social change workshops, and the application of yogic technology to living in the world while caring about it deeply. A former manager of the Grateful Dead, he is the senior Kundalini Yoga teacher in the San Francisco Bay Area. After leading workshops for over thirty-five years, he has spent the last ten years working on developing an understanding of the nature of self worth issues and how to effectively address them.

“I do not know any work that is more important for the evolution of humanity’s collective consciousness and our own evolution as spiritual beings, than to heal the wounds that block us from fulfilling our destiny and prevent us from feeling satisfied with life, and then to learn how to help others heal their wounds.” ~ Sat Santokh Khalsa